Abstract: Free Access References John Breen, John BreenSearch for more papers by this authorMark Teeuwen, Mark TeeuwenSearch for more papers by this author Book Author(s):John Breen, John BreenSearch for more papers by this authorMark Teeuwen, Mark TeeuwenSearch for more papers by this author First published: 04 January 2010 https://doi.org/10.1002/9781444317190.refs AboutPDF ToolsRequest permissionExport citationAdd to favoritesTrack citation ShareShare Give accessShare full text accessShare full-text accessPlease review our Terms and Conditions of Use and check box below to share full-text version of article.I have read and accept the Wiley Online Library Terms and Conditions of UseShareable LinkUse the link below to share a full-text version of this article with your friends and colleagues. Learn more.Copy URL Share a linkShare onFacebookTwitterLinked InRedditWechat References Newspapers Cited Google Scholar Asahi shinbun Google Scholar Asahi shinbun (Kyōto furoku) Google Scholar Chūgai denpō Google Scholar Jinja shinpō Google Scholar Kokumin shinbun Google Scholar Kyōto shinbun Google Scholar Ōsaka Asahi (Shigaban) Google Scholar Sankei shinbun Google Scholar Shūkan shinchō Google Scholar Yomiuri shinbun Google Scholar Online Sources Google Scholar All sites were last accessed July 2, 2009. Google Scholar www.ndl.go.jp/constitution/e/etc/c01.html#s10 Google Scholar www.sangiin.go.jp/japanese/kenpou/keika_g/147_08g.htm Google Scholar kokkai.ndl.go.jp/SENTAKU/syugiin/159/0107/15903110107002a.html Google Scholar www.sangiin.go.jp/japanese/kenpou/keika_g/159_08g.htm Google Scholar www.sinseiren.org Google Scholar www.keta.jp Google Scholar www.jinjahoncho.or.jp/en/view/ Google Scholar ww.jinjahoncho.or.jp/en/pXublications/nature/index.html Google Scholar www2.odn.ne.jp/shasou/expo.htm Google Scholar www.kyoharen.net Google Scholar inari.jp Google Scholar inari.jp/c_sairei/index.html Google Scholar www.aso-taro.jp/lecture/talk/060808.html Google Scholar www.shinto.org/isri/jpn/forum/forum19/taidan2/htm Google Scholar Other Sources Google Scholar Abé, Ryuichi. 1999. The weaving of mantra: Kūkai and the constitution of esoteric Buddhist discourse. Columbia University Press. Google Scholar Abe Yasurō. 2000. Ninnaji shiryō shintō-hen, shintō kanjō injin. Nagoya Daigaku Hikaku Jinbungaku Kenkyūshitsu. Google Scholar Adolphson, Mikael. 1997. Enryakuji – An old power in a new era. In Jeffrey Mass, ed., The origins of Japan's medieval world. Stanford University Press. Google Scholar Adolphson, Mikael. 2000. The gates of power. University of Hawai‘i Press. Google Scholar Akisato Ritō. 1944. Ise sangū meisho zue, ed. Ashida Koreto. Tōyōdō. Google Scholar Ambrose, Barbara. 2008. Emplacing a pilgrimage: The Ōyama cult and regional religion in early modern Japan. Harvard University, Asia Center. CrossrefGoogle Scholar Arakawa Kusuo. 1989. Kōki Mitogaku ni okeru daijos̄ai no kenkyū. In Kōgakkan Daigaku Shintö Kenkyūjo, ed., Daijōsai no kenkyū, vol. 2. Kōgakkan Daigaku Shuppanbu. Google Scholar Arichi, Meri. 2006. Sannō miya mandara: The iconography of Pure Land on this earth. Japanese Journal of Religious Studies, 33(2). Google Scholar Ashizu Uzuhiko. 1986. Shimaguni no tami no kokoro. Shimazu Shobō. Google Scholar Aston, W. G. 1972. Nihongi: Chronicles of Japan from the earliest times to A. D. 697. Tuttle. Google Scholar Bentley, John R. 2006. The authenticity of Sendai kuji hongi. Brill. Google Scholar Bialock, David T. 2007. Eccentric spaces, hidden histories: Narrative, ritual and royal authority from The Chronicles of Japan to The Tale of the Heike. Stanford University Press. CrossrefWeb of Science®Google Scholar Blacker, Carmen. 1990. The shinza or God-seat in the daijōsai: Throne, bed, or incubation couch? Japanese Journal of Religious Studies, 17. Google Scholar Bock, Felicia. 1970. Engi-shiki: Procedures of the Engi era, vol. 1. Sophia University Press. Google Scholar Bock, Felicia. 1972. Engi-shiki: Procedures of the Engi era, vol. 2. Sophia University Press. Google Scholar Bocking, Brian. 2001. The Oracles of the Three Shrines: Windows on Japanese Religion. Routledge. Google Scholar Bouchy, Anne. 2003. Et le culte, sera-t-il shintôou bouddhique? Cipango, 11. Google Scholar Bowring, Richard. 2005. The religious traditions of Japan, 500–1600. Cambridge University Press. Google Scholar Breen, John. 1990. Shintoists in Restoration Japan: Towards a reassessment. Modern Asian Studies, 24(3). CrossrefCASWeb of Science®Google Scholar Breen, John. 2000. Ideologues, bureaucrats and priests: On Buddhism and Shintō in early Meiji Japan. In Breen and Teeuwen, eds., 2000. Google Scholar Breen, John. 2004a. Death issues in 21st century Japan. Mortality, 9(1). CrossrefCASWeb of Science®Google Scholar Breen, John. 2004b. The dead and the living in the land of peace: A sociology of Yasukuni. Mortality, 9(1). CrossrefCASWeb of Science®Google Scholar Breen, John. 2007a. Meiji tennō o yomu. Ratio, 3. Web of Science®Google Scholar Breen, John. 2007b. Inside Tokugawa religion: Stars, planets and the calendar-as-method. Culture and cosmos, 10(1–2). Web of Science®Google Scholar Breen, John. 2007c. Kingendai Shintōshi no jidai kubun. In Shintō Kokusai Gakkai ed., Shintōshi kenkyū no saikō. Kokusai Bunka Kōbō. Google Scholar John Breen, ed. 2008a. Yasukuni, the war dead and the struggle for Japan's past. Columbia University Press. Google Scholar Breen, John. 2008b. Introduction: A Yasukuni genealogy. In Breen, ed., 2008a. Google Scholar Breen, John. 2008c. Yasukuni and the loss of historical memory. In Breen, ed., 2008a. Google Scholar John Breen and Mark Teeuwen, eds. 2000. Shintō in history: Ways of the kami. University of Hawai‘i Press. Google Scholar Como, Michael. 2008. Shōtoku: Ethnicity, ritual, and violence in the Japanese Buddhist tradition. Oxford University Press. CrossrefGoogle Scholar Como, Michael. 2009. Weaving and binding: Female shamans and immigrant gods in Nara Japan. University of Hawai‘i Press. CrossrefGoogle Scholar Davis, Winston. 1992. Japanese religion and society: Paradigms of structure and change. State University of New York Press. Google Scholar DeCaroli, Robert. 2004. Haunting the Buddha. Oxford University Press. CrossrefGoogle Scholar Ellwood, Robert. 1973. The feast of kingship: Accession ceremonies in ancient Japan. Sophia University Press. Google Scholar Endō Jun. 1998. The Shinto funeral movement in early modern and modern Japan. Transactions of the Institute for Japanese Culture and Classics, 82. Google Scholar Endō Jun. 2004. Shintō kara mita kinsei to kindai: Shakaiteki bunmyakuni okeru kotoba no imi o megutte. In Iwanami kōza shūkyō, 3: Shūkyōshi no kanōsei, Iwanami Shoten. Google Scholar Endō Jun. 2008. Hirata kokugaku to kinsei shakai. Perikansha. Google Scholar Faure, Bernard. 1998. The red thread: Buddhist approaches to sexuality. Princeton University Press. CrossrefGoogle Scholar Fridell, Wilbur M. 1973. Japanese shrine mergers 1906–12: Shinto moves to the grassroots. Sophia University. Google Scholar Fukuyama Toshio. 1985. Jinja kenchiku no kenkyū. Chūō Kōron Bijutsu Shuppan. Google Scholar Geinōshi Kenkyūkai, ed. 1982. Nihon geinōshi, vol. 2. Hōsei Daigaku. Google Scholar Gishiki 3, Tai ka 21. MS (Historical Archives, Prefectural Office, Shiga Prefecture). Google Scholar Grapard, Allan. 1984. Japan's ignored Cultural Revolution: The separation of Shinto and Buddhist divinities in Meiji (“shimbutsu bunri”) and a case study: Tōnomine. History of Religions, 23(3). CrossrefWeb of Science®Google Scholar Grapard, Allan. 1988. Institution, ritual, and ideology: The twenty-two shrine-temple multiplexes of Heian Japan. History of Religions, 27. Google Scholar Grapard, Allan. 1992a. The protocol of the gods: A study of the Kasuga cult in Japanese history. University of California Press. Google Scholar Grapard, Allan. 1992b. The Shinto of Yoshida Kanetomo. Monumenta Nipponica, 47(1). CrossrefWeb of Science®Google Scholar Grapard. Allan. 2002. Shrines registered in ancient Japanese law: Shinto or not? Japanese Journal of Religious Studies, 29(3–4). Google Scholar Hagiwara Tatsuo. 1962. Chūsei saishi soshiki no kenkyū. Yoshikawa Kōbunkan. Google Scholar Hardacre, Helen, 1986. Kurozumikyō and the new religions of Japan. Princeton University Press. CrossrefGoogle Scholar Hardacre, Helen. 1989. Shinto and the state, 1868–1988. Princeton University Press. Google Scholar Hardacre, Helen. 2002. Religion and society in 19th century Japan. Centre for Japanese Studies, University of Michigan Ann Arbor. Google Scholar Harootunian, Harry D. 1998. Figuring the folk: History, poetics, and representation. In Vlastos, ed., 1998. Google Scholar Hashimoto Kōsaku. 2005. Buzen no kuni kagura kō. Fukuoka: Kaichōsha. Google Scholar Hashimoto Masanobu. 1997. Kanbun Gonen “Jinja jōmoku” no kinō. Shintō shūkyō, 168(9). Google Scholar Hashimoto Mitsuru. 1998. Chihō: Yanagita Kunio's “Japan”. In Vlastos, ed., 1998. Google Scholar Hatakama Kazuhiro. 2007. Shingakusha. In Yokota Fuyuhiko, ed., Chishiki to gakumon o ninau hitobito. Yoshikawa Kōbunkan. Google Scholar Hie Jinja, comp. Issha kindai hennen ryakuki. Undated MS (Hiyoshi Taisha). Hie koshiki saiki. 1943. MS (Hiyoshi Taisha). Google Scholar Hie sairei tenkō byōbu. 1850s. Google Scholar Hie Sannō rishōki. In ST Hie. Google Scholar Hie sairei kozu. 1822. Google Scholar Hocart, A. M. 1927. Kingship. Oxford University Press. Google Scholar Hoshino Teruoki. 1991. Tairei Hongi. Appendix to Miyachi Masato, 1991. Google Scholar Imaizumi Yoshiko. 2007. Contested space: A genealogy of Meiji shrine. London University, unpublished PhD thesis. Google Scholar Inoue Hiroshi. 2006. Nihon no jinja to Shintō. Kōsō Shobō. Google Scholar Inoue Nobutaka. 2002. The formation of sect Shinto in modernizing Japan. Japanese Journal of Religious Studies, 29(3–4). Google Scholar Inoue Nobutaka et al. 2003. Shinto: A short history (translated and adapted by Mark Teeuwen and John Breen). Routledge Curzon. CrossrefGoogle Scholar Inoue Suguru. 2000. Shiryō honkoku: Nishikawa Yoshisuke shokan (1), Rittō rekishika minzoku hakubutsukan kiyō, 6. CASWeb of Science®Google Scholar Inoue Takami. 2003. The interaction between Buddhist and Shinto traditions at Suwa Shrine. In Teeuwen and Rambelli, eds., 2003. Google Scholar Ishizuka Takatoshi. 2005. Sato-kagura no seiritsu ni kansuru kenkyū. Iwata Shoin. Google Scholar Isomae Jun'ichi. 2000a. Tanaka Yoshitō and the beginnings of Shintōgaku. In Breen and Teeuwen, eds., 2000. Google Scholar Isomae Jun'ichi. 2000b. Reappropriating the Japanese myths: Motoori Norinaga and the creation myths of the Kojiki and Nihon shoki. Japanese Journal of Religious Studies, 27(1–2). Google Scholar Isomae Jun'ichi and Ogura Shigeji. 2005. Kinsei chōtei to Suika Shintō. Perikansha. Google Scholar Iwai Tadakuma and Okada Seishi, eds. 1989. Tennō daigawari gishiki no rekishiteki tenkai. Kashiwa Shobō. Google Scholar Iwata Masaru. 1994. Kaguragoto ni okeru takusen-gata to akurei kyōseigata. In Yamaori Tetsuo and Miyamoto Kesao, eds., Saigi to jujutsu. Yoshikawa Kōbunkan. Google Scholar Jōi on inori no ki. MS (Eizan bunko). Google Scholar Jōkyō yonen Sannō sengū ki. 1687. MS (Hiyoshi Taisha). Google Scholar Juge Shigekuni. Hie sha negi kuden shō. In ST Hie. Google Scholar Juge Shigekuni. Saijin oyobi kanjō nenki. MS (Historical Archives, Prefectural Office, Stiga Prefecture). Google Scholar Kageyama Haruki. 2001. Shintaizan: Nihon no genshi shinkō o saguru. Gakuseisha. Google Scholar Kakushin. 1688. Hie Sannō sairei shinki. In ST Hie. Google Scholar Kamikawa Michio. 1989. Chūsei no sokui girei to bukkyō. In Iwai and Okada, eds., 1989. Google Scholar Kamikawa Michio. 1990. Accession rituals and Buddhism in Medieval Japan. Japanese Journal of Religious Studies, 17(2–3). Google Scholar Kanpei Taisha Hie Jinja shamusho, ed. 1942. Kanpei Taisha Hie Jinja dainenpyō. Kanpei Taisha Hie Jinja shamusho. Google Scholar Katagiri Yōichi. 1971–87. Chūsei kokinshū chūshakusho kaidai, 6 vols. Akao Shōbundō. Google Scholar Katō Genchi. 1931. Honpō seishi no kenkyū. Meiji Seitoku Kinen Gakkai. Google Scholar Klein, Susan B. 2002. Allegories of desire: Esoteric literary commentaries of medieval Japan. Harvard University Press. Google Scholar Kobayashi Zuiho. 2008. Jinjakai ni okeru kōkeisha fusoku ni kansuruishiki. Shintō shūkyō, 208(9). Google Scholar Kōnoshi Takamitsu. 2000. Constructing imperial mythology: Kojiki and Nihon shoki. In Haruo Shirane and Tomi Suzuki, eds., Inventing the classics. Stanford University Press. Google Scholar Kozawa Hiroshi. 1988. Minshū shūkyō no shinsō. InTsukamoto Manabu, ed., Nihon no shakaishi, 8: Seikatsu kankaku to shakai. Iwanami Shoten. Google Scholar Kuroda Ryūji. 1999. Chus̄ei jisha shinkō no ba. Shibunkaku. Google Scholar Kuroda Toshio. 1981. Shinto in the history of Japanese religion. Journal of Japanese Studies, 7(1). Web of Science®Google Scholar Kyōgaku Kenkyūjo Chōsashitsu, ed. 1997. Jinja ni kansuru ishiki chōsa hōkokusho. Jinja Honchō Kyōgaku Kenkyū jo. Google Scholar Lincoln, Bruce. 1999. Theorizing myth: Narrative, ideology, and scholarship. University of Chicago Press. Google Scholar Liscutin, Nicola. 2000. Mapping the sacred body: Shinto versus popular beliefs at Mt. Iwaki in Tsugaru. In Breen and Teeuwen, eds., 2000. Google Scholar Maeda Natsushige. 1868. Hie Sannō ben. In ST Tendai Shintōge. Google Scholar Maeda Tsutomu. 2006. Heigaku to shushigaku, rangaku, kokugaku. Heibonsha. Google Scholar Mase Kumiko. 1985. Bakuhansei kokka ni okeru jinja ronsō to chōbaku kankei: Yoshida Shirakawa o chūshin ni. Nihonshi kenkyū, 277. Google Scholar Matsumae Takeshi. 1974. Kodai denshō to kyūtei saishi. Hanawa Shobō. Google Scholar Mayumi Tsunetada. 1989. Daijōsai no sekai. Gakuseisha. Google Scholar Mills, D. E. 1970. A collection of tales from Uji. Cambridge University Press. Google Scholar Mitamura Yoshiko. 2005. Sato-kagura handobukku: Fukushima, Kantō, Kōshin'etsu. Ō fū. Google Scholar Miyachi Masato, comp. 1988. Shūkyō kankei hōrei ichiran. In Miyachi Masato and Yasumaru Yoshio, eds., Kindai Nihon shisō taikei, 5: Shūkyō to kokka. Iwanami Shoten. Google Scholar Miyachi Masato. 1991. Tennōsei ideorogii ni okeru daijōsai no kinō : Jōkyōdo no saikō yori konnichi made. Rekishi Hyōron, 492. Google Scholar Miyake Kazuo. 1984. Kiki shinwa no seiritsu. Yoshikawa Kōbunkan. Google Scholar Miyata Noboru. 1972. Kinsei no hayarigami. Hyōronsha. Google Scholar Mizubayashi Takeshi. 2001. Kiki shinwa to ōken no matsuri. Iwanami Shoten. Google Scholar Mizubayashi Takeshi. 2002. Kodai shinwa no ideorogii kōsei. In Amino Yoshihiko et al., eds., Tennō to ōken o kangaeru, 4: Shūkyō to ken'i. Iwanami Shoten. Google Scholar Mizubayashi Takeshi. 2005. Kojiki to Nihon shoki. In Hara Takeshi and Yoshida Yutaka, eds., Tennō kōshitsu jiten. Iwanami Shoten. Google Scholar Mizuno Masayoshi, ed. 1992. Kodai o kangaeru: Ōmi. Yoshikawa Kōbunkan. Google Scholar Moerman, D. Max. 2006. Localizing paradise: Kumano pilgrimage and the religious landscape of premodern Japan. Harvard University Press. Google Scholar Momochi Akira. 1995. Daijōsai kanren soshō hanketsu o megutte. Meiji Seitoku Kinen Gakkai Kiyō, 16. Google Scholar Motoori Norinaga. 1991. Naobi no mitama; trans. Sey Nishimura, In the way of the gods: Motoori Norinaga's Naobi no Mitama. Monumenta Nipponica, 46(1). Web of Science®Google Scholar Müller, Gerhild. 1971. Kagura: Die Lieder der kagura-Zeremonie am Naishidokoro. Harrassowitz. Google Scholar Muraoka Tsunetsugu. 1920. Hirata Atsutane shingaku ni okeru Yasokyō no eikyō. Geibun, 11(3). Google Scholar Myōhōinshi Kenkyūkai, ed. 1976. Gyōjo shinnō nikki. Yoshikawa Kōbunkan. Google Scholar Nakai, Kate W. 1988. Shogunal politics: Arai Hakuseki and the premises of Tokugawa rule. Harvard East Asian Monograph. Harvard University Press. CrossrefGoogle Scholar Nakai, Kate W. 2007. The Age of the Gods in medieval and early modern historiography. In James C. Baxter and Joshua A. Vogel, eds., Writing histories in Japan. Kyoto: International Research Center for Japanese Studies. Google Scholar Nakamura Ken. 1988. Chūsei chiiki-shi no kenkyū. Takashina Shoten. Google Scholar Naumann, Nelly. 2000. The state cult of the Nara and early Heian periods. In Breen and Teeuwen, eds., 2000. Google Scholar Nelson, John. 1996. A year in the life of a Shinto shrine. University of Washington Press. Google Scholar Nelson, John. 2000. Enduring identities: The guise of Shinto in contemporary Japan. University of Hawai‘i Press. Google Scholar Nishida Nagao. 1978. Nihon Shintōshi kenkyū, vol. 7. Kōdansha. Google Scholar Nishimiya Hideki. 2004. Ritsuryō kokka to jingi saishi seido no kenkyū. Hanawa Shobō. Google Scholar Nishimiya Kazutami. 1979. Shinten Nihon koten shūsei, Kojiki. Shinchōsha. Google Scholar Nishioka Kazuhiko. 2004. Kinsei Izumo taisha no kisoteki kenkyū. Hara Shobō. Google Scholar Nitta Hitoshi. 2000. Shinto as a “non-religion”: The origins and development of an idea. In Breen and Teeuwen, eds., 2000. Google Scholar Nitta Hitoshi. 2008. And why shouldn't the prime minister worship at Yasukuni? In Breen, ed., 2008. Google Scholar Okada Seishi. 1970. Kodai ōken no saishi to shinwa. Hanawa Shobō. Google Scholar Okada Seishi. 1987. Hie Jinja to Tenji-chō Ō tsumiya. In Nihon shoki kenkyū vol. 16. Hanawa Shobō. Google Scholar Okada Seishi. 1989. Taiō shūnin girei no genkei to sono tenkai. In Iwai and Okada, eds., 1989. Google Scholar Okada Shōji. 1990. Ō name no matsuri. Gakuseisha. Google Scholar Okada Shōji and Kase Naoya, eds. 2007. Jinja no shinkō hanpu: Sono rekishiteki keii o kangaeru tame ni. 21-Seiki COE Puroguramu, Kokugakuin Daigaku. Google Scholar Okada Yoneo. 1987. Jingū to Jinja honchō. InJingū shichō, ed., Jingū Meiji hyakunenshi (jō). Jingū Bunko. Google Scholar Oketsume Osamu. 1981. Jisha ryō no hensen. In Shinshū Ōtsu shishi, 3: Kinsei zenki, Ō tsu shiyakusho. Google Scholar Ō no Izuru. 2002. Omikuji. In Hayashi Makoto and Koike Jun'ichi, eds., Onmyōdō no kōgi. Sagano Shoin. Google Scholar Ono Sokyō. 1962. Shinto: The kami way. Tuttle. Google Scholar Ontaireki. In Zenkoku Shinshokukai Kaihō, vol. 205 (1915). Google Scholar Ooms, Herman. 1985. Tokugawa ideology: Early constructs, 1570–1680. Princeton University Press. Google Scholar Ooms, Herman. 2008. Imperial politics and symbolics in imperial Japan: The Tenmu dynasty. University of Hawai‘i Press. CrossrefGoogle Scholar Orikuchi Shinobu zenshū. Chūō Kōronsha. 1975. Google Scholar Philippi, Donald L. 1969. Kojiki. University of Tokyo Press. CrossrefGoogle Scholar Plutschow, Herbert. 1996. Matsuri: The festivals of Japan. Japan Library. Google Scholar Ponsonby-Fane, Richard A. B. 1959. The Imperial House of Japan, Ponsonby-Fane Memorial Society. Google Scholar Reader, Ian. 1994. Religion in contemporary Japan. Macmillan. Google Scholar Reader, Ian and Tanabe, George J. Jr. 1998. Practically religious: Worldly benefits and the common religion of Japan. University of Hawai‘i Press. CrossrefGoogle Scholar Rimer, J. Thomas and Yamazaki Masakazu. 1984. On the art of nō drama: The major treatises of Zeami. Princeton University Press. Google Scholar Sagai Tatsuru. 1992. Hiyoshi Taisha to Sannō Gongen. Jinbun Shoin. Google Scholar Saigō Nobutsuna. 1973. Kojiki kenkyū. Miraisha. Google Scholar Saitō Hideki. 1996. Amaterasu no fukami e. Shin'yōsha. Google Scholar Saitō Hideki. 2002. Mi-kagura no Amaterasu. In Inseiki Bunka Kenkyū kai, ed., Inseiki bunka ronshū 2: Gensetsu to tekisutogaku. Shinwasha. Google Scholar Sakamoto Koremaru. 2000. The structure of state Shinto: Its creation, development and demise. In Breen and Teeuwen, eds., 2000. Google Scholar Sakurai Tokutarō. 1988. Kō shūdan no kenkyū. Sakurai Tokutarō chosakushū 1. Yoshikawa Kōbunkan. Google Scholar Samukawa Tatsukiyo. 1733. Ō mi yochi shiryaku. Google Scholar Sanekata Yōko. 2000. Hie Sannō sairei zu byōbu o yomu: Umikita Yūsetsu no sō i to senryaku. Izumiya Hakubutsukan kiyō, 16. Google Scholar Sasaki Kiyoshi. 1998. Amenominakanushi no kami in late Tokugawa period Kokugaku. In Inoue Nobutaka, ed., Contemporary Papers on Japanese Religion, 4: Kami. Institute for Japanese Culture and Classics, Kokugakuin University. Google Scholar Satō Masato. 1984. Chūsei Hie sha no fugeki ni tsuite. Kokugakuin zasshi, 85(8). Google Scholar Satō Masato. 1989. Hie sha negi kuden shō no seiritsu. Ō kurayama Ronshū, 25. Google Scholar Satō Masato. 1993. Kinsei shake no Yoshida Shintō juyō : Hie shashi no jirei o megutte. Ōkurayama Ronshū, 33. Google Scholar Satow, Ernest. 1871. FO 46/143 no. 140. Adams to Granville, 30 December 1871. National Archives, Kew. Google Scholar Scheid, Bernhard. 2000. Reading the Yuiitsu Shintō myōbō yōshū: A modern exegesis of an esoteric Shinto text. In Breen and Teeuwen, eds., 2000. Google Scholar Scheid, Bernhard. 2001. Der Eine und Einzige Weg der Götter: Yoshida Kanetomo und die Erfindung des Shinto. Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften. Google Scholar Bernhard Scheid and Mark Teeuwen, eds. 2006. The culture of secrecy in Japanese religion. Routledge. Google Scholar Sekimori, Gaynor. 2005. The separation of kami and buddha worship in Haguro Shugendō, 1869–1875. Japanese Journal of Religious Studies, 32(2). Google Scholar Selden, Mark. 2008. Japan, the United States and Yasukuni nationalism: War, historical memory and the future of the Asia Pacific. Japan Focus, 1215. Google Scholar Shibuya Jigai, ed. 2000. Kō tei zōho Tendai zasu ki. Daiichi Shobō. Google Scholar Shibuya Kuritsu Shōtō Bijutsukan, ed. 1999. Ukiyoeshi-tachi no shinbutsu. Shibuya Kuritsu Shōtō Bijutsukan. Google Scholar Shinbutsu Reijōkai, ed. 2008. Kami to hotoke no michi o aruku. Shūeisha. Google Scholar Shōgenji Kitoku. Hie jinja korei saishiki. MS (Historical Archives, Prefectural Office, Shiga Prefecture). Google Scholar Shōgenji Kiyo. Ō yamakui shinden. 1836. MS (Eizan bunko). Google Scholar Shōgenji Yukimaru. 1577. Hiesha Shintō himitsu ki. In ST Hie. Google Scholar Shōgenji Yukimaru. 1588. Hiesha Shin'yaku nenjū gyōji. In ST Hie. Google Scholar Smyers, Karen. 1999. The fox and the jewel: Shared and private meanings in contemporary Inari worship. University of Hawai‘i Press. Google Scholar Sonoda Minoru. 2000. Shinto in the natural environment. In Breen and Teeuwen, eds., 2000. Google Scholar Stone, Jacqueline. 1999. Original enlightenment and the transformation of medieval Japanese Buddhism. University of Hawai‘i Press. Google Scholar Sugahara Shinkai. 1992. Sannō Shintō no kenkyū. Shunjūsha. Google Scholar Suzuki Hajime. 2003. Konkō Daijin. Konkōkyōtosha. Google Scholar Takano Toshihiko. 2003. Edo jidai no jinja seido. In Takano, ed., Genroku no shakai to bunka. Yoshikawa Kōbunkan. Google Scholar Takashima Kōji. 1978. Edo jidai no sanmon kuninshū : Kageyamake kyūzō monjo o chūshin ni. Kokushigaku Kenkyū, 4. Google Scholar Takeda Hideaki. 1996. Ishinki Tennō saishi no kenkyū. Taimeidō. Google Scholar Tamura Enchō. 1996. Ise Jingū no seiritsu. Yoshikawa Kōbunkan. Google Scholar Teeuwen, Mark. 1996. Watarai Shintō: An intellectual history of the Outer Shrine of Ise. CNWS Publications. Google Scholar Teeuwen, Mark. 2000. The kami in esoteric Buddhist thought and practice. In Breen and Teeuwen, eds., 2000. Google Scholar Teeuwen, Mark. 2002. From jindō to Shinto: A concept takes shape. Japanese Journal of Religious Studies, 29(3–4). Google Scholar Teeuwen, Mark. 2006. Knowing vs. owning a secret: Secrecy in medieval Japan, as seen through the sokui kanjō enthronement unction. In Scheid and Teeuwen, eds., 2006. Google Scholar Teeuwen, Mark. 2007a. Comparative perspectives on the emergence of jindō and Shinto. Bulletin of SOAS, 70(2). Web of Science®Google Scholar Teeuwen, Mark. 2007b. Sendai kuji hongi: Authentic myths or forged history? Monumenta Nipponica, 62(1). CrossrefWeb of Science®Google Scholar Mark Teeuwen, and Fabio Rambelli, eds. 2003. Buddhas and kami in Japan: Honji suijaku as a combinatory paradigm. RoutledgeCurzon. CrossrefWeb of Science®Google Scholar Ten Grotenhuis, Elizabeth. 1999. Japanese mandalas. University of Hawai‘i Press. Google Scholar Thal, Sarah. 2005. Rearranging the landscape of the gods. University of Chicago Press. Google Scholar Thornhill, Arthur H. III. 1993. Six circles, one dewdrop: The religio-aesthetic world of Konparu Zenchiku. Princeton University Press. Google Scholar Tokoro Isao. 1993. Shiryō shōkai: Taishō Shōwa no Tairei yōshi. Kyōto Sangyō Daigaku Sekai Mondai Kenkyūjo Kiyō, 30. Google Scholar Tokutomi Sohō. 1926. Kinsei Nihon kokuminshi: Hōreki Meiwa hen. Min'yūsha. Google Scholar Toyoda Takeshi. 1982. Chūsei no shōnin to kōtsū. In Toyoda Takeshi chosakushū, 3. Yoshikawa Kōbunkan. Google Scholar Tyler, Royall. 2003. The tale of Genji. Penguin Books. Google Scholar Uwai Hisayoshi. 1988. Nihon kodai no shinzoku to saishi. Jinbun Shoin. Google Scholar Stephen Vlastos, ed. 1998. Mirror of modernity: Invented traditions of modern Japan. University of California Press. Google Scholar Wada Mitsuo. 2006. Sakamoto ni okeru Sannō mandara no shosō. Tendai shū 1200nen kinen, Tendai shū o mamoru kamigami: Sannō mandara no shosō. Ōtsushi Rekishi Hakubutsukan. Google Scholar Wakabayashi, Bob Tadashi. 1986. Anti-foreignism and Western learning in early modern Japan: The New Theses of 1825. Harvard East Asian Monograph. Harvard University Press. CrossrefGoogle Scholar Walthall, Anne. 1998. The weak body of a useless woman: Matsuo Taseko and the Meiji Restoration. University of Chicago Press. Google Scholar Wang Zhixin. 2008. China, Japan and the spell of Yasukuni. In Breen, ed., 2008a. Google Scholar Witzel, Michael. 2005. Vala and Iwato: The myth of the hidden sun in India, Japan, and beyond. Electronic Journal of Vedic Studies, 12(1). Google Scholar Yamamoto Junya. 2002. Shiryō honkoku: Nishikawa Yoshisuke shokan (2). Rittō Rekishi Minzoku Hakubutsukan kiyō, 8. CASGoogle Scholar Yamamura Akiyoshi. 2009. Ima Jinja Shintō ga abunai, Shokun, 41(3). Web of Science®Google Scholar Yanagita Kunio. 1969. Nihon no matsuri. In Teihon Yanagita Kunio shū, vol. 10. Chikuma Shobō. Google Scholar Yasumaru Yoshio and Miyachi Masato, eds. 1988. Nihon kindai shisō taikei 5: Shūkyō to kokka. Iwanami Shoten. Google Scholar Yoshida Yuriko. 1995. Kunin to “ken'i”. InKurushima Hiroshi et al., eds., Kinsei no shakai shūdan. Yamakawa Shuppansha. Google Scholar A New History of Shinto ReferencesRelatedInformation